Karna Reproves Shalya; Brahmin Reports on Bāhlīkas; Shalya’s Universalizing Rebuttal (कर्ण–शल्य संवादः)
स्त्रीमध्यमिव गाहन्ते दैवं तु बलवत्तरम् । संजय! इस प्रकार वर्तमान महान् युद्धोंमें जो मैं प्रतेदिन ही अपने कुछ पुत्रोंको मारा गया और कुछको पराजित हुआ सुनता आ रहा हूँ
strī-madhyam iva gāhante daivaṁ tu balavattaram |
Sañjaya said: “They plunge in as if into the midst of women; but destiny is the stronger. Hearing day after day that some of my sons are slain and others are routed in this great war, I have come to the conviction that on the battlefield there is no hero who can truly check the Pāṇḍavas. As people enter fearlessly among women, so do the Pāṇḍavas enter my army without hesitation. In this matter, fate indeed proves overwhelmingly powerful.”
संजय उवाच
The verse underscores the Mahābhārata theme that human prowess and strategy can be overruled by daiva (destiny). Even when armies and heroes are present, outcomes may be driven by a larger moral-causal order, experienced here as the irresistible momentum of the Pāṇḍavas’ victory.
Sañjaya reports the ongoing collapse of the Kaurava side: Dhṛtarāṣṭra keeps hearing that his sons are being killed or defeated daily. Sañjaya concludes that no warrior can stop the Pāṇḍavas, who penetrate the Kaurava ranks as easily as one would enter an unresisting crowd, and he attributes this to the overpowering force of fate.